By Monique Chelin | Sustainability Consultant & UN SDG Integration Specialist
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have become the universal language of sustainability. From multinational corporations to local governments, organizations worldwide are aligning their strategies and reporting with these 17 ambitious goals.
But there’s a problem: SDG alignment has become dangerously superficial for many organizations. Slapping colorful SDG icons on a sustainability report without genuine integration isn’t just ineffective—it’s greenwashing. And stakeholders are increasingly savvy at spotting the difference.
As someone who has integrated UN SDGs and UN Global Compact principles into sustainability strategies for over two decades, I’ve seen both authentic alignment and superficial claims. Here’s how to ensure your SDG reporting reflects genuine commitment rather than empty rhetoric.
The Greenwashing Trap: What Not to Do
Before we discuss authentic SDG alignment, let’s identify common greenwashing pitfalls:
Red flag #1: Cherry-picking easy goals Claiming alignment with SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy) because you installed solar panels on one office building, while ignoring your organization’s massive carbon footprint.
Red flag #2: Vague, unquantified claims Stating “we contribute to SDG 8 (Decent Work)” without specific metrics, targets, or evidence of impact.
Red flag #3: Reporting only positive contributions Highlighting SDGs where you have positive impact while ignoring goals where your operations create negative impacts.
Red flag #4: Confusing outputs with outcomes Reporting activities (“we conducted 10 community consultations”) rather than actual impact (“community consultation led to project design changes that reduced noise pollution by 40%”).
Red flag #5: Lack of materiality Claiming alignment with multiple SDGs without explaining which are most material to your business and stakeholders.
Authentic SDG Alignment: A Framework
Step 1: Conduct Honest Impact Assessment
Begin with rigorous assessment of both positive and negative impacts across your value chain.
Questions to ask: – Where do our operations, products, or services create positive SDG impacts? – Where do we create negative impacts or trade-offs? – Which SDGs are most material to our business model and stakeholders?
Resource: The SDG Compass provides comprehensive guidance for businesses on SDG integration.
Step 2: Prioritize Material SDGs
You don’t need to address all 17 SDGs. In fact, trying to do so dilutes focus and credibility. Identify the 3-5 SDGs where your organization has the most significant impact—positive or negative.
Prioritization criteria: – Magnitude of impact (scale and severity) – Likelihood of impact – Stakeholder concern – Strategic relevance to business model – Capacity to influence outcomes
Step 3: Set Specific, Measurable Targets
Vague commitments undermine credibility. For each prioritized SDG, establish specific targets aligned with relevant SDG indicators.
Example of authentic target-setting:
Weak: “We support SDG 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation).”
Strong: “By 2028, we will reduce water consumption in mining operations by 30% (baseline 2025) and achieve zero discharge of contaminated water, contributing to SDG 6.3 (improve water quality) and 6.4 (increase water-use efficiency).”
Resource: Review UN SDG indicators to align your metrics with global measurement frameworks.
Step 4: Report Transparently on Trade-offs
Authentic SDG reporting acknowledges complexity. Many business activities create both positive and negative SDG impacts, or involve trade-offs between different goals.
Example: A mining project might contribute positively to SDG 8 (economic growth and employment) while creating challenges for SDG 15 (life on land). Credible reporting acknowledges both dimensions and explains how you’re managing trade-offs.
Step 5: Connect Actions to Outcomes
Don’t just report what you did—report what changed as a result.
Activity reporting (weak): “We invested $2 million in community development programs.”
Outcome reporting (strong): “Our $2 million investment in vocational training programs resulted in 350 local residents gaining employment, increasing household incomes by an average of 35% and contributing to SDG 1 (No Poverty) and SDG 8 (Decent Work).”
Step 6: Integrate SDGs Into Strategy and Governance
SDGs shouldn’t be a reporting add-on. Integrate them into strategic planning, risk management, and governance structures.
Integration indicators: – Board-level oversight of SDG-related risks and opportunities – SDG targets incorporated into executive performance metrics – Investment decisions evaluated against SDG impact – Procurement policies aligned with SDG priorities
Sector-Specific Considerations
For Mining and Resources Companies
Priority SDGs typically include: – SDG 8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth) – SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production) – SDG 13 (Climate Action) – SDG 15 (Life on Land)
Critical consideration: Be transparent about environmental and social impacts. Stakeholders expect mining companies to address challenging SDGs like climate action and biodiversity, not just economic contributions.
For Infrastructure Projects
Priority SDGs typically include: – SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure) – SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities) – SDG 13 (Climate Action)
Critical consideration: Infrastructure projects have long-term impacts. Report on both construction phase and operational phase SDG contributions.
Verification and Assurance
Independent verification strengthens SDG reporting credibility. Consider: – Third-party assurance of sustainability reports – Alignment verification against SDG Compass or similar frameworks – Stakeholder validation of claimed impacts
What Monique Chelin Has Learned About SDG Integration
After two decades integrating UN SDGs and UN Global Compact principles into business strategies across mining, infrastructure, and government sectors, here’s what I know: authentic SDG alignment requires courage.
Courage to acknowledge negative impacts alongside positive contributions. Courage to prioritize a few goals rather than claim superficial alignment with many. Courage to set ambitious, measurable targets and report transparently on progress.
The organizations that get SDG reporting right don’t treat it as a communications exercise. They use the SDGs as a strategic framework for identifying risks, opportunities, and stakeholder priorities—then report honestly on their journey.
Greenwashing might provide short-term reputational benefits, but it creates long-term risk. Stakeholders—including investors, communities, and regulators—are increasingly sophisticated at distinguishing authentic sustainability leadership from superficial claims.
The question isn’t whether to align with the SDGs. It’s whether you’ll do so with integrity.
About the Author
Monique Chelin is an internationally recognized sustainability consultant specializing in UN Sustainable Development Goals integration and ESG strategy. As founder of MJC Sustainability, Monique has spent over 20 years helping organizations across mining, infrastructure, and government sectors authentically integrate SDGs into business strategy and reporting. She has delivered sustainability solutions for major clients including BHP Billiton, Virgin Australia, and the Australian Federal Government across Australia, Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Fiji, and Papua New Guinea. Monique is a passionate advocate for moving beyond greenwashing to genuine sustainability leadership and is Australia’s first PRiSM™ Green Project Management trainer.
Connect with Monique: LinkedIn | monique@mjcsustainability.com




